Let Go, Lighten Up, Back Off Now or Never


Download the full Draper here newsletter
in printable, live-link, pdf format, here.

Another week has gone by and we in California are gliding into October on the tail end of warm and sunny weather. The furious rollercoaster ride that is life is making me dizzy and the only chance I have to catch a breath and restore perspective is at the gym. I know the place, its corners and edges, its top and bottom and everything in between.

There’s the bench and there are the dumbbells and that’s a bar and this is a cable machine. That’s me in the mirror (hi) and the sound you hear (Eagles) in the background is rock and roll. Have straps, will lift. Got water?

Bombing and blasting is my favorite terminology for hard, devoted and sensible training, focused on the moment, the movement and the muscle engagement, the set, rep and pace. Smiles and laughter in little packages is good stuff, often energizing and a welcome relief. However, I suggest you leave politics and sports, sex and the job for another venue. The last thing a real lifter needs is cortisol-producing explosions to wreck his or her bombing and blasting.

Authentic muscleheads are akin in particular ways. None of us are cowards, nor do we capitulate easily, and we firmly trust our ready, willing and able natures. Health, strength and muscle are within our grasp. And though we press on toward the goal before us, it’s reassuring to know we need not train mercilessly, there are no records to set every workout and there is no hurry.

Alas! This is a good day to savor the workout and live right and let life fall into place like a precise cog in a well-lubricated gearshift.

This is a wise and realistic approach to our training. Though we often replace wise and realistic with driven and intense -- life has a way of injecting passion into our veins -- taking the slow and steady way is often healthier and more enjoyable... and more certain. How often have we looked at the steep mountain of iron before us and decided to take no way rather than high way... or take the high way and slipped off the slope and landed on our bottom on the bottom.

Consequences of either choice are real: guilt, lost workout and training synchronicity, or overtraining, injury, displeasure and iron-pounding resentment.

Geez, Lareez. Anticipation alone can be an exhausting burden and often starts the day before a crucial and towering workout. Of course, this anticipation under willing circumstances is known as psyching up and is hardly a burden but an important performance asset. But when the stress-loaded attribute rests on the back consistently and habitually, it can be training killer.

It’s amazing how much work I accomplish on the gym floor and under the iron when I release my grip on the big stick behind my back and the frown on my forehead and allow myself to train willingly, agreeably, sensibly... and, eventually, enthusiastically. Relax, Bomber.

Lighten up is not the typical encouragement a weightlifter receives from the gleeful sideline spectators or his robust training partner. Here’s where “bomb it” and “blast it” come in handy; one more rep, you can do this, and Push, Push, Push. How often have we heard those cheering words in the shadows of strain and hoisted that last burning rep, or that added plate on the end of the bar? Often enough!

Lighten up when appropriate. Be aware.

A younger man or woman than I who confronts the jingle-jangle jungle needs to be consistent, persistent and forbearing. Muscles are establishing, chemistry is adapting, disciplines are forming, information is collecting and understanding is growing. Treasures are mounting.

Pressing on is a more significant part of the narrative, the process, the adventure. The “lighten up” principle is less necessary, less appealing, less recommended and can smell of laziness... and can lead to lost momentum and slowed progress, disappointment and guilt, depression... and drinking, drugs and suicide (just kidding).

The last thing a novice or intermediate weightlifter needs is a certified, valid principle to back off and lighten up when he gets the urge. Training intensity and integrity are easily compromised, courage goes untested and commitment is softened. Beware, lest you yield prematurely! Be strong.

I’m a riot. I begin our friendly discourse applauding the love affair that is musclebuilding and weight training, the attributes we display and acquire as we engage in the activities, and go on to offer a brief respite in our noble struggles that we may enjoy their fragrance and flavor, their texture and grand feeling. Then I dare the unworthy lifter and warn the barely worthy bomber that such a delightful embrace might lead to disaster. I offer a crumb and quickly remove it before the unsure outstretched hand.

Touch the crumb and risk losing the whole loaf of bread... cookie, layer cake and apple pie.

I have the dubious advantage of perching on a century-old treetop and scanning the scenery below. My wings, though shedding an occasional feather, are established and familiar with the winds of time. I’m an old buzzard. I can glide and maintain my flight without the fight. I’m sore but can still soar. I bomb and blast and though not fast, I last... not strong, I prolong... not extraordinarily healthy, I’m un-ordinarily stealthy.

Are you confused yet? Me, too. To lighten up or not to lighten up, that is the question; back off or no. Let me think...lighten up when the woes of life are such that weightlifting is a question, and not an answer; a problem and not a solution.

By golly, I think I’ve got it.

Should hoisting the bar become a dastardly deed and not a justice, reduce its bulk and don’t sulk. Have fun for awhile. Smile. If the gym and its contents present a burdensome task, not a welcome diversion, make light the weights and play for the day. It’s okay. And never engage in a soul-weary slog when trimming the load makes it a life-saving mission. You have my permission.

Lighten up when you want to see where you are and know who you are. To lighten up after having heavied-down is to have earned a quick look or an extended visit. Take your time with your training when you have the time. Better yet, take time with your training when you don’t have the time. Grab the weights with both hands and while you’re at it put your arms around them. Lift the cold steel with a strong tug and warm hug.

Sit on the bench, lean against the rack, adjust the plates on the bar, and lift when you lift. Notice the combining force of man and metal, the burn and the groove, the power and pump, the contraction and release, the beginning and the end, the breath in and breath out. You have lightened up. Congratulations!! You have dared to notice what you are doing. You backed off, courageously and thoughtfully and confidently, to find the joy and purpose of training, working out, weightlifting, pressing on and moving the iron.

That’s enough for now, unless you can’t stop. Warning! That happens often when you let go... you hold on tight.

Bombs and wings, throttles and tail-feathers and Godspeed... Davester

Soak yourself in a taste of bodybuilding’s Golden Era with Dick Tyler’s on-the-scene record, written in his easy-going, one-of-a-kind style, West Coast Bodybuilding Scene.

Take a trip over to our
New Musclebuilding Q&A Blog
... where Dave allows us a peek into his email outbox.

Did you sign up for Dave's expanded email yet?
It's free, motivating and priceless!
We'll also send you a link to Dave's free
Body Revival Tips and Hints e-report with your confirmation notice.

BILL PEARL/DAVE DRAPER LIVE SEMINAR DVD

The  Package includes a one-hour-and-fifteen-minute tape of the July seminar, two muscular slide shows, plus a 32-page booklet outlining the subsequent interview between the mighty one, Bill Pearl, and me in which we discuss some favorite subjects untouched by the seminar. ~Dave

Cut through the confusion! Grab your copy Brother Iron Sister Steel to make your training path clear.

Readers agree: Dave new book, Iron On My Mind, is non-stop inspirational reading.

Our IronOnline Forum will answer your training and nutriton questions right here, right now.

Golden Era fans will rejoice in this excerpt from West Coast Bodybuilding Scene.

Are your shoulders tight? Do your shoulders hurt when you squat? It's practically a miracle! Dave's Top Squat assists squatters with shoulder problems.

Here's Dave's previous week's column.